My most treasured possession
What's your most treasured possession? What would you rescue from a fire (be it for sentimental or purely financial reasons)?
My Great-Uncle left me his visitors book which along with boring people like the Queen and Harold Wilson has Spike Milligan's signature in it. It's all loopy.
Either that or my Grandfather's swords.
( , Thu 8 May 2008, 12:38)
What's your most treasured possession? What would you rescue from a fire (be it for sentimental or purely financial reasons)?
My Great-Uncle left me his visitors book which along with boring people like the Queen and Harold Wilson has Spike Milligan's signature in it. It's all loopy.
Either that or my Grandfather's swords.
( , Thu 8 May 2008, 12:38)
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but
by 2010 there's going to be an estimated exabyte (10^18 bytes) of data online. Fine and dandy, but how exactly are you going to find what you need...? Information only really exists if you can access it. That means annotating and cataloguing your data efficiently or hoping that someone will come up with some highly efficient automated metadata-generation storage and retrieval.
( , Wed 14 May 2008, 12:37, Reply)
by 2010 there's going to be an estimated exabyte (10^18 bytes) of data online. Fine and dandy, but how exactly are you going to find what you need...? Information only really exists if you can access it. That means annotating and cataloguing your data efficiently or hoping that someone will come up with some highly efficient automated metadata-generation storage and retrieval.
( , Wed 14 May 2008, 12:37, Reply)
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